4.5 Article

Emergent coastal behaviour results in extreme dune erosion decoupled from hydrodynamic forcing

期刊

MARINE GEOLOGY
卷 442, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.margeo.2021.106667

关键词

Dune erosion; Beach lowering; Emergent behaviour; Storm response, storm recovery, XBeach

资金

  1. U.K. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/M004996/1]
  2. BLUE-coast project
  3. NERC [NE/M004996/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Coastal dune erosion is a critical issue in the face of rising sea levels and increased storminess. This study focuses on the severe erosion of the climbing dune system at Crantock beach in north Cornwall, UK, which has shown acceleration despite reduced severe storm events since 2013/14. The shifting channel of the River Gannel and ongoing river avulsion have played a significant role in the decoupled nature and emergent response of the dune system at Crantock.
Coastal dune systems provide vital natural barriers against storm impacts and coastal inundation. In times of rising sea levels and uncertainty over increasing storminess, it is critical that dune erosion is adequately understood and actively monitored. This study investigates the severe erosion of the climbing dune system at Crantock, an exposed macro-tidal beach in north Cornwall, UK, that before 2013 showed relative stability. In contrast to regional consistency in beach recovery across north Cornwall since the major storms of 2013/14, Crantock beach and dune system have shown an acceleration in erosion. This has resulted in dramatic cut-back of the front of the climbing dune system since 2016, despite the reduced frequency of severe storm events since 2013/14. The decoupled nature and emergent response of Crantock's dune system are explained by the shifting channel of the River Gannel, which has its outflow over the beach. Intertidal bar movement during the recovery from the 2013/14 storm sequence, alongside an ongoing deterioration of the training wall that pinned the River Gannel to the East Pentire cliffs to the north of the beach, has led to a southward avulsion of the river that has since lowered the elevation of the beach in front of the dunes. XBeach modelling suggests that the increased dune erosion can be attributed to a lowering of the beach profile and steepening of the dune face, indicating that the river avulsion has triggered a step-change in the dune equilibrium and the onset of dramatic erosional events.

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